Anonymous wrote:Bea's of Bloomsbury. They have several tea shops -- in Bloomsbury (naturally), Marylebone, the City. Very casual when we were in the Bloomsbury shop a week ago -- and more importantly, good scones and cakes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would not describe high tea as a light meal! When my great grandma made it, you got a fried egg, bacon, sausage, bread and butter, cheese, and cakes.
I’m an American living in England.
I’ve never seen or heard high tea being used. But it is what American call dinner or supper. The evening meal. My English freinds regularly call this meal tea. Just tea. So like, I’ll have a play date and a mom will ask me if I am serving tea. (Dinner) or if they should pick up their kid before or after tea. Kids and adults still use this phrasing. Supper is used to refer to a heavier and maybe later evening meal. But I’m not sure on this!
You want “afternoon tea”. It is served in places from 3pm-6pm usually. It’s like a pretty light meal before you’d have a later “supper”. It is an experience. You are brought a tray of goodies and your tea.
It is not the same as just popping into a cafe and buying a scone and a pot of tea. This is nice too, and you can do this in almost all department and grocery stores.
A cream tea is when you get a tea and a scone with clotted cream and jam. It is more popular in Devon and Cornwall.
Anonymous wrote:We enjoyed tea a muriel’s Kitchen. It was very casual—blue jeans, T-shirt’s, shorts—would be fine. And the sandwiches and cakes were tasty. They also served a yummy Little smoothie. Reminded me of a hipster tea place. The atmosphere was chill but also very English. We went to the location in Kensington and there was a black taxi or red double decker bus outside our window, usually both, at all times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would not describe high tea as a light meal! When my great grandma made it, you got a fried egg, bacon, sausage, bread and butter, cheese, and cakes.
I’m an American living in England.
I’ve never seen or heard high tea being used. But it is what American call dinner or supper. The evening meal. My English freinds regularly call this meal tea. Just tea. So like, I’ll have a play date and a mom will ask me if I am serving tea. (Dinner) or if they should pick up their kid before or after tea. Kids and adults still use this phrasing. Supper is used to refer to a heavier and maybe later evening meal. But I’m not sure on this!
You want “afternoon tea”. It is served in places from 3pm-6pm usually. It’s like a pretty light meal before you’d have a later “supper”. It is an experience. You are brought a tray of goodies and your tea.
It is not the same as just popping into a cafe and buying a scone and a pot of tea. This is nice too, and you can do this in almost all department and grocery stores.
A cream tea is when you get a tea and a scone with clotted cream and jam. It is more popular in Devon and Cornwall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would not describe high tea as a light meal! When my great grandma made it, you got a fried egg, bacon, sausage, bread and butter, cheese, and cakes.
I’m an American living in England.
I’ve never seen or heard high tea being used. But it is what American call dinner or supper. The evening meal. My English freinds regularly call this meal tea. Just tea. So like, I’ll have a play date and a mom will ask me if I am serving tea. (Dinner) or if they should pick up their kid before or after tea. Kids and adults still use this phrasing. Supper is used to refer to a heavier and maybe later evening meal. But I’m not sure on this!
You want “afternoon tea”. It is served in places from 3pm-6pm usually. It’s like a pretty light meal before you’d have a later “supper”. It is an experience. You are brought a tray of goodies and your tea.
It is not the same as just popping into a cafe and buying a scone and a pot of tea. This is nice too, and you can do this in almost all department and grocery stores.
A cream tea is when you get a tea and a scone with clotted cream and jam. It is more popular in Devon and Cornwall.
You don't hear of "high tea" because people only hear of it in shows like Downton Abbey. Its outdated. And you're right - its dinner or supper (depending on your class and where you live, up north or down south etc) or for kids, "tea-time".
Anonymous wrote:The Orangerie at Kensington Gardens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would not describe high tea as a light meal! When my great grandma made it, you got a fried egg, bacon, sausage, bread and butter, cheese, and cakes.
I’m an American living in England.
I’ve never seen or heard high tea being used. But it is what American call dinner or supper. The evening meal. My English freinds regularly call this meal tea. Just tea. So like, I’ll have a play date and a mom will ask me if I am serving tea. (Dinner) or if they should pick up their kid before or after tea. Kids and adults still use this phrasing. Supper is used to refer to a heavier and maybe later evening meal. But I’m not sure on this!
You want “afternoon tea”. It is served in places from 3pm-6pm usually. It’s like a pretty light meal before you’d have a later “supper”. It is an experience. You are brought a tray of goodies and your tea.
It is not the same as just popping into a cafe and buying a scone and a pot of tea. This is nice too, and you can do this in almost all department and grocery stores.
A cream tea is when you get a tea and a scone with clotted cream and jam. It is more popular in Devon and Cornwall.